Spectral clustering for image segmentation

In this example, an image with connected circles is generated and spectral clustering is used to separate the circles.

In these settings, the Spectral clustering approach solves the problem know as ‘normalized graph cuts’: the image is seen as a graph of connected voxels, and the spectral clustering algorithm amounts to choosing graph cuts defining regions while minimizing the ratio of the gradient along the cut, and the volume of the region.

As the algorithm tries to balance the volume (ie balance the region sizes), if we take circles with different sizes, the segmentation fails.

In addition, as there is no useful information in the intensity of the image, or its gradient, we choose to perform the spectral clustering on a graph that is only weakly informed by the gradient. This is close to performing a Voronoi partition of the graph.

In addition, we use the mask of the objects to restrict the graph to the outline of the objects. In this example, we are interested in separating the objects one from the other, and not from the background.

  • ../../_images/sphx_glr_plot_segmentation_toy_001.png
  • ../../_images/sphx_glr_plot_segmentation_toy_002.png
  • ../../_images/sphx_glr_plot_segmentation_toy_003.png
  • ../../_images/sphx_glr_plot_segmentation_toy_004.png
print(__doc__)

# Authors:  Emmanuelle Gouillart <[email protected]>
#           Gael Varoquaux <[email protected]>
# License: BSD 3 clause

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

from sklearn.feature_extraction import image
from sklearn.cluster import spectral_clustering

l = 100
x, y = np.indices((l, l))

center1 = (28, 24)
center2 = (40, 50)
center3 = (67, 58)
center4 = (24, 70)

radius1, radius2, radius3, radius4 = 16, 14, 15, 14

circle1 = (x - center1[0]) ** 2 + (y - center1[1]) ** 2 < radius1 ** 2
circle2 = (x - center2[0]) ** 2 + (y - center2[1]) ** 2 < radius2 ** 2
circle3 = (x - center3[0]) ** 2 + (y - center3[1]) ** 2 < radius3 ** 2
circle4 = (x - center4[0]) ** 2 + (y - center4[1]) ** 2 < radius4 ** 2

# #############################################################################
# 4 circles
img = circle1 + circle2 + circle3 + circle4

# We use a mask that limits to the foreground: the problem that we are
# interested in here is not separating the objects from the background,
# but separating them one from the other.
mask = img.astype(bool)

img = img.astype(float)
img += 1 + 0.2 * np.random.randn(*img.shape)

# Convert the image into a graph with the value of the gradient on the
# edges.
graph = image.img_to_graph(img, mask=mask)

# Take a decreasing function of the gradient: we take it weakly
# dependent from the gradient the segmentation is close to a voronoi
graph.data = np.exp(-graph.data / graph.data.std())

# Force the solver to be arpack, since amg is numerically
# unstable on this example
labels = spectral_clustering(graph, n_clusters=4, eigen_solver='arpack')
label_im = -np.ones(mask.shape)
label_im[mask] = labels

plt.matshow(img)
plt.matshow(label_im)

# #############################################################################
# 2 circles
img = circle1 + circle2
mask = img.astype(bool)
img = img.astype(float)

img += 1 + 0.2 * np.random.randn(*img.shape)

graph = image.img_to_graph(img, mask=mask)
graph.data = np.exp(-graph.data / graph.data.std())

labels = spectral_clustering(graph, n_clusters=2, eigen_solver='arpack')
label_im = -np.ones(mask.shape)
label_im[mask] = labels

plt.matshow(img)
plt.matshow(label_im)

plt.show()

Total running time of the script: ( 0 minutes 0.708 seconds)

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